Sensory processing disorder (SPD; also known as sensory integration dysfunction) is a condition that exists when multisensory integration is not adequately processed in order to provide appropriate responses to the demands of the environment.

The data shown below were collected from the profiles of tweeters who shared this article.
Click here to find out more about how the information was compiled.

Geographical breakdown

#

Country

As %

1

US

33%

2

GB

13%

3

CA

3%

3

ES

3%

5

NL

1%

5

IT

1%

5

PT

1%

5

RU

1%

–

Unknown

37%

Tweeter demographics

Type

Count

As %

Members of the public

45

84%

Scientists

3

5%

Practitioners (doctors, other healthcare professionals)

3

5%

Science communicators (journalists, bloggers, editors)

2

3%

Mendeley readership

The data shown below were compiled from readership statistics for 46 Mendeley readers of this article.
Click here to see the article's page on the Mendeley website.

Geographical breakdown

#

Country

As %

1

FR

4%

1

GB

4%

1

US

4%

4

JP

2%

4

DE

2%

4

AU

2%

4

MX

2%

4

CL

2%

–

Unknown

76%

Reader demographics

Readers by discipline

Count

As %

Psychology

14

30%

Medicine

11

23%

Biological Sciences

9

19%

Social Sciences

5

10%

Education

3

6%

Other

4

8%

Readers by professional status

Count

As %

Ph.D. Student

10

21%

Post Doc

7

15%

Student (Master)

7

15%

Student (Bachelor)

6

13%

Student (Postgraduate)

3

6%

Other

13

28%

What's this page for?

It pulls together some of the online activity around this article. It is maintained by Altmetric. We collect relevant information from social media sites, blogs, newspapers, magazines and more.

Having one place where you can see all of the comments on or shares of an article makes it easier to see what others think of the work.

To help you put the data in context we've given the article an Altmetric score, which is our measure of the quality & quantity of online attention that it has received. The scoring algorithm is relatively straightforward and takes things like the relative reach of different data sources into account.

Note that the Altmetric score can't tell you anything about the quality of the article though reading through the different tabs might.

You can do this for more than one paper. Alerts are sent out once a day if and only if there has been some activity around one of the papers you want to watch.

You've missed a news story, who can I speak to?

If you're waiting for a tweet or blog post to appear then give it a day: we try to pick up mentions as quickly as possible but it can take some time to process all of the information we collect, especially at peak times.

If more than a day has passed then please fill in this form - it will go to our support team who will take a look and update your article details page as soon as possible.

The Altmetric score is one measure of the quality and quantity of online attention that this article has received.
You can read about how
Altmetric scores are calculated here.

This article scored 96.84

The context below was calculated when this article was last mentioned on
2nd November 2014

Compared to all articles in NeuroImage: Clinical

So far Altmetric has tracked 217 articles from this journal. They typically receive a little more attention than average, with a mean score of 5.9 vs the global average of 5.0. This article has done particularly well, scoring higher than 98% of its peers. It's actually the 3rd highest scoring article in this journal that we've seen so far.

In the98%ile

Ranks
3rd

All articles of a similar age

Older articles will score higher simply because they've had more time to accumulate mentions. To account for age we can compare this score to the 83,462 tracked articles that were published within six weeks on either side of this one in any journal. This article has done particularly well, scoring higher than 98% of its contemporaries.

In the98%ile

Ranks
998th

Other articles of a similar age in NeuroImage: Clinical

We're also able to compare this article to 7 articles from the same journal and published within six weeks on either side of this one. This article has scored higher than all of them.

In the85%ile

Ranks
1st

All articles

More generally, Altmetric has tracked 3,109,812 articles across all journals so far. Compared to these this article has done particularly well and is in the 99th percentile: it's in the top 5% of all articles ever tracked by Altmetric.